Researchers have come to a surprising new understanding of the complexities of the global food trade and the impacts of biodiversity hotspots.
From: Michigan State University
May 13, 2022 -- In this
week's Nature Food, Michigan State University (MSU) researchers
find that imports from high-income countries benefit biodiversity in low-income
countries.
The findings in
"International food trade benefits biodiversity and food security in
low-income countries" fly in the face of conventional wisdoms: that
high-income countries harm biodiversity in low-income countries by importing
food from them, and yet low-income countries, particularly those with biodiversity
hotspots, were increasingly becoming net importers themselves.
Two MSU sustainability
scholars from the Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability (CSIS)
looked at the growing complexities of global food trade for a better
understanding of the interactions and impacts of growing food to feed the world
and protecting some of the most precious natural resources.
"Understanding the
interrelationships between food security and biodiversity is essential to
achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals," said CSIS
director Jianguo "Jack" Liu, MSU Rachel Carson Chair in
Sustainability and co-author. "Our work seeks to understand how we can
achieve global food security to feed a growing population without sacrificing
biodiversity in the telecoupled world."
Countries that are
growing both in population and wealth demand more food, and often turn to
importing foods. Countries that are increasing their food exports, which often
means converting their lands to farms or pastures, can find it results in
damage to the environment and biodiversity.
Some low-income
countries that don't have biodiversity hotspots such as Ukraine have rapidly
increased exporting food to hotspot countries. Those exports might help further
reduce negative impacts on biodiversity.
Liu and Min Gon Chung,
who received his PhD at MSU and now is a postdoctoral researcher at University
of California, Merced, examined comprehensive datasets comprising 189 food
items across 157 countries during 2000-2018.
The pair offer
suggestions, such has having food prices include costs to biodiversity, and
those earnings be used to mitigate the damages to biodiversity. Underscoring
all solutions involves countries working together to strike agreements
benefiting both coffers and the environment.
"With increasing
the complexity of food trade among countries with and without biodiversity
hotspots, more innovative approaches are needed to minimize the negative
impacts of global food production and trade on biodiversity in hotspot
countries worldwide," Chung said.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/05/220512121845.htm
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